The Tall People: Reflections on Humans and Trees

     This lovely piece was written by my husband Andy Schmookler.  It first appeared on his website www.NoneSoBlind.org. 

April and I are lovers of trees. In no small part, it is the love of trees that brought us back from the High Desert of New Mexico to the wooded mountains of Virginia. And making the most of our being here, the other day we went on a walk through our woods.

With us was our slim and slinky and silvery pussycat, Pitter. (Her sister, Patter, also used to walk these woods with us but, alas, she met her end on the same day as Senator Wellstone’s plane went down—a day that will live in sorrow.)

As we walked along the bed of leaves and amid the upright trunks of oaks and hickories and maples and pines, April said, “Do you think Pitter thinks of the trees as ‘the tall cats?’” I instantly recognized the joke, semi-private as it was: for April has long appreciated and often cited something she learned years ago from the book Hanta Yo, namely that some tribe or other of Native Americans called trees “the tall people.”

After giving a chortle of acknowledgment, I addressed the question as if serious: No, a cat would not identify with the trees as we people do, because they’re horizontal, spinally speaking, and what makes the trees the ‘tall people’ is that we and the trees share our upright stance in the world.”

It’s a lovely notion, this identification of us people with trees, because trees are such splendid creatures. April is of the opinion that trees are more likely to be God’s favorites than humans, and I can certainly see her point.

(She’s expressed beautifully one of her many appreciative takes on the trees in our world in a recent piece on her website entitled, “Trees on Winter Nights,” to be found at www.theearthconnection.org/blog/2009/03/trees-on-winter-nights/)

Trees aren’t the only upright things in nature, but they may be the one’s we feel best to connect ourselves with. Tulips, lovely as they are, are too fragile, too slight, too fleeting. We like to think of ourselves as made of stronger stuff, of more substantial and enduring than such temporary upthrusts from the earth as the flowers of spring. Better the noble tree that towers above the land, that lasts through the years.

We see ourselves as tree-like, and we like the connection. Tall, dignified, enduring, a thing of beauty.

As my mind turned toward this likening of trees with humans, a phrase from Longfellow’s poem, Evangeline, came to my mind: he says of the trees that they “stand like Druids of old.”

He speaks of these trees as he conjures up “the forest primeval.”

THIS is the forest primeval. The murmuring pines and the hemlocks,
Bearded with moss, and in garments green, indistinct in the twilight,
Stand like Druids of eld, with voices sad and prophetic…

The Druids of old tell us of the solemnity of the trees. The dignity, the looming presence of a great force. The trees speak with the voices of prophets.

The trees represent an elevated, flattering view of human possibility.

I would be glad to think of us as ‘the short trees.’

4 Responses to “The Tall People: Reflections on Humans and Trees”

  1. Seth Binsted Says:

    April and Andy:

    This reminds me of a passage 371 from Nietzsche’s The Gay Science:

    “WE INCOMPREHENSIBE ONES:

    We incomprehensible ones. – Have we ever complained because we are misunderstood, misjudged, misidentified, slandered, misheard, and not heard? Precisely this is our fate – oh, for a long time yet! Let us say, to be modest until 1901 – it is also our distinction; we should not honor ourselves sufficiently if we wished that it were otherwise. We are misidentified because we ourselves keep growing, keep chaging, we shed our old bark, we shed our skins every spring, we keep becoming younger, fuller of future, taller, stronger, we push our roots ever more powerfully into the depths – into evil – while at the same time we embrace the heavens ever more lovingly, more broadly, imbibing their light ever more thirstily with all our twigs and leaves. Like trees we grow – this is hard to understand, as is all of life – not in one place only but everywhere, not in one direction but equally upward and outward, and inward and downward; our energy is at work simultaneously in the trunk, branches, and roots; we are no longer free to do ony one particular thing, to be only one particular thing.

    This is our face, as I have said; we grow in height; and even if this should be our fatality–for we dwell ever closer to the lightning–well, we do not on that account honor it less; it remains that which we do not wish to share, to make public–the fatality of the heights, OUR fatality.”

  2. Joan Brundage Says:

    Thanks, Andy, for sharing such wise and beautiful thoughts. I love trees and find them inspiring as well as very healing.

  3. Elizabeth Says:

    I will surely lay claim to any possible kinship with these beautiful works of creation, especially as illuminated by Andy and April’s eloquent and vibrant prose. How often the Native Americans captured in beautiful simplicity things that we need to remember and embrace! Thank you for reminding us!

  4. Judy Says:

    One of my favorite yoga asanas is The Tree. I always like to hold this pose standing before a window, aligning myself with a tree. Today it is my apple tree, graced with pink blooms. I like pines best of all — none in my yard here in Albuquerque, but from the cabin I sometimes visit in Colorado. Standing in Tree asana makes me feel grounded, connected, rooted into the earth.

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